Difference between revisions of "Rice, Henry"

From Santa Cruz County history wiki
Jump to: navigation, search
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Henry Rice''' ([https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/73846102/henry-rice 1810-1889]) was a Santa Cruz businessman and civic leader. He was listed and shown as a property owner in Block 2 of the [[1866 Santa Cruz map]], on the mission plaza at the corner of High St. and what is now Sylvar St. That lot was later owned by [[Sylvar, Jackson|Jackson Sylvar]].  
+
'''Henry Rice''' ([https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/73846102/henry-rice 1810-1889]) was a Santa Cruz businessman and civic leader. He was listed and shown as a property owner in Block 2 of the [[1866 Santa Cruz map]], on the mission plaza at the corner of High St. and what is now Sylvar St. That lot was later owned by [[Sylvar, Jackson|Jackson Sylvar]].
 +
 
 +
The 1866 map also shows Rice as owner of a large parcel (8+ acres) in "Block No. 4", just to the west of the Pacific Avenue lot owned by the partnership "Moore & Pray, PO House" ([[Moore, William H.|William Moore]] and [[Pray, Amasa|Amasa Pray]]), which built the Pacific Ocean House hotel in 1866. That hotel replaced the San Lorenzo Hotel, which had burned down in 1865. According to ''Sidewalk Companion'', the San Lorenzo Hotel was built in 1852 by Henry Rice, so Rice probably sold the hotel site to them after the fire.
 +
*[[Evergreen Cemetery of Santa Cruz (2020 book)]] has a short biography of Rice. 
  
 
[[Category:Persons]]
 
[[Category:Persons]]
 
[[Category:1866 town property owners]]
 
[[Category:1866 town property owners]]
 
[[Category:Persons in Sidewalk Companion]]
 
[[Category:Persons in Sidewalk Companion]]

Revision as of 04:38, 5 December 2021

Henry Rice (1810-1889) was a Santa Cruz businessman and civic leader. He was listed and shown as a property owner in Block 2 of the 1866 Santa Cruz map, on the mission plaza at the corner of High St. and what is now Sylvar St. That lot was later owned by Jackson Sylvar.

The 1866 map also shows Rice as owner of a large parcel (8+ acres) in "Block No. 4", just to the west of the Pacific Avenue lot owned by the partnership "Moore & Pray, PO House" (William Moore and Amasa Pray), which built the Pacific Ocean House hotel in 1866. That hotel replaced the San Lorenzo Hotel, which had burned down in 1865. According to Sidewalk Companion, the San Lorenzo Hotel was built in 1852 by Henry Rice, so Rice probably sold the hotel site to them after the fire.